FBI 'Most Wanted' fugitive arrested in Woodbridge after public tips

Gomez, a Honduran citizen with is in his late 20s or 30s and was in the USA illegally, is suspected in the death of Julio Matute in Plainfield in May 2011.

The FBI says that Gomez is an individual from the MS-13 pack that has as of late gotten new examination after President Donald Trump pledged to get serious about the universal gathering as a feature of his organization's movement strategies, following more than twelve posse related murders on Long Island.

Gomez was featured in an August 1 FoxNews.com story on the most violent MS-13 gang members being sought by the feds.

Gomez struck the casualty in the head a few times with an aluminum play club, at that point cut him in the throat with a blade and wounded him 17 times in the back with a screwdriver, the Federal Bureau of Investigation said.

According to the FBI, Gomez and another man befriended Matute and spent an evening partying at his house before attacking him as he was preparing to leave for work the next morning. His wounds were so severe that authorities were only able to identify him because of his tattoos.

The FBI has said before that Gomez was attempting to wind up noticeably an undeniable individual from the neighborhood office of the transnational posse when the executing happened.

But Gomez got away, and he was charged in September 2013 with violent crime in aid of racketeering.

Gomez was added to the most-wanted list in April of this year, and was the only figure to have played a role in Matute's death who had not been prosecuted.

Gomez' cohort, who was also an MS-13 member, was caught and convicted.

A $100,000 reward had been offered for the arrest of Gomez, who was considered armed and risky. It is not known if anybody will claim it, or how exactly Gomez was apprehended.